Controlling the quantum stereodynamics of ultracold bimolecular reactions
M. H. G. de Miranda, A. Chotia, B. Neyenhuis, D. Wang, G. Quemener, S., Ospelkaus, J. L. Bohn, J. Ye, D. S. Jin

TL;DR
This paper demonstrates how quantum stereodynamics can be used to significantly suppress bimolecular reactions in ultracold polar molecules by employing a quasi-two-dimensional trap and external electric fields, enabling new quantum gas studies.
Contribution
It introduces a method to control and suppress ultracold bimolecular reactions using quantum stereodynamics and tight confinement, advancing the study of dipolar quantum gases.
Findings
Reaction rate suppressed by nearly two orders of magnitude.
Side-by-side collisions dominate due to confinement and Fermi statistics.
Enables exploration of strongly correlated many-body physics.
Abstract
Chemical reaction rates often depend strongly on stereodynamics, namely the orientation and movement of molecules in three-dimensional space. An ultracold molecular gas, with a temperature below 1 uK, provides a highly unusual regime for chemistry, where polar molecules can easily be oriented using an external electric field and where, moreover, the motion of two colliding molecules is strictly quantized. Recently, atom-exchange reactions were observed in a trapped ultracold gas of KRb molecules. In an external electric field, these exothermic and barrierless bimolecular reactions, KRb+KRb -> K2+Rb2, occur at a rate that rises steeply with increasing dipole moment. Here we show that the quantum stereodynamics of the ultracold collisions can be exploited to suppress the bimolecular chemical reaction rate by nearly two orders of magnitude. We use an optical lattice trap to confine the…
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